WW 2 book says torture is effective

K9Buck

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I'm reading a book called "A Woman of no Importance". It's about the most successful undercover British agent that operated in France during the Nazi occupation. But something keeps coming up in the book that confuses me. The author keeps discussing how members of the resistance were getting tortured and, under torture, gave up names of other resistors as well as other intelligence. But that can NOT be accurate. After all, liberals tell us that torture never works. Is the author lying?
 
It may not always work, but it can and does in many cases.

PC libtards just like denying reality.
 
It works better than prayer rugs and soccer fields...
 
Torture will get you any confession you care to have.
 
Torture will get you any confession you care to have.

Are you saying that the author is wrong and that the Gestapo didn't extract useful information when they tortured people?
 
Lest we forget there was a FBI agent, Robert Hanssen, who gave up names of agents for money.
 
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